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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1891—SIXTEEN PAGES, | l seomed to Invigorate him and hi loom re- | Tom, he whispered take me out of | | Sundberg & Erickson, manufacticers 4 L laxed, but presently it became too evident | this plice—take me out from those dog: windmills N that the prisoner's pinjoned arms made it | and pimps and beggars! Listen, Tom folin Tongue, altorney-at-law ‘ 1 imposaible. fof him to balance or hein him re Syiney Ducks aieket-ot-luive men, | A Forceful Element in the Development of [ Dr: Ariferson, phssician and surs § £ self on that steep trail, and twice he card sharps and sngak thieves! There | i The Swedish business and profession \ EQHL & g stumbled and reeled dangerously (o one s A gentleman among There fsn't | Polk County. Hian of. Oecola AME - ke O Mohsor ) BY BRET HARTE. With an oath the sheriff caught him and | one I don't loathe and nd would | i general merchandise and owner 4 SEAHLES tore from his arms the only remaining bonds | grind under my heel els I'm a | WHAT T § ) > > X y 5 that fettered him ntleman, Tom—yes, HyY God!—an officer HE PIONEERS HAVE DONE : grain dealors . R IN TWO PARTS-PART IL There!" he said savagely; “go on—we're | and a gentleman! I've served my country N. P, Froenan, deuer i live stock u \[ [\l Copiright 1564, by Dret 1arte cqual | In the Ninth cavalry. - That cub of West | e Anderson, boot and shoo maker AL Without replylng the major continued his | Point knows it and desplses me, seeing me wting Histo 4 Rting to liing, blacksmith and wagon mak Dawson was not astonished, t the first shock 1ajor it became steeper as they neared the | hora i such compaiy. That — sergeant | MTOTCALUNE Historleal Facts Relating to r. Woberg, painter and decorntor morning, to see Major Overstono an had exhibited none of the inlignation of a and at last they were both obliged to | knows ft—I recommend®d’ him for his first Religlons Organi < and Business Here as elsewhere (his nationality b half breed walking together down the betrayed man, but actually ned 1o A¢ | qrag themselves up by clutching tho vines | siripes—for all he tauntd'me, d—n him! and Political Lite—Progressive a very narrow swath in office holding cept the situation with a calmness that his | ang underbrush. Suddenly the major stopped Come! wake up!”.isaid the sheriff and 5 withstanding their numerical strength captor lacked His vl was quite un with a listeaing gesture. A strange roaring hly. Berggren held the of county clusion that the major was planning emotional as he said as of wind or water—was distinetiy audible, e prisoner did not heed him; the missioner two terms, and Mr. A, 0. M extraordinary reprisal against the iny “And how are you golng to get me away | “How did you signal?” asked the major, o ot the office of county * one teri that would Inaure the perpetual sccurity of | from.here? abruptly During the fall of 1872 the pioneer settlors | 5 18" otarson i Yty the camp. That he shonld use o insignifi S Ol L DR Made a smoke,” said the sheriff as ab- In the present Swede Home settlement in | clork one term. was clected last fall an PETEEACMEN U 8y AL, am; J » Insign you, major; but seeing as how confidential | puntie 4 oIk - ovtint ) i R b i Tt Avdolc of ERT YRY. A& TEORHLY 0 i tation ¥ cant and unimportant a tool now appeared | you've heen to me; 1 don't mind tellin® you. | b3 Polk county received a pastoral visit from | qualified tho first week of th NG £ " ught so. Well, you've set the wood S % & i BRIC JOHNSON to him to be quite natural, partienlarly ns | Last night that posse of mine that you | on fire. ¢ Rev. A, N. Sweders, then in charge of the | < . | the service bably onie in which the | ‘“kunked' yon know, halted at the cross | ‘They both plunged upward again, now quite \ v Lutheran church at Omaha. The reverend | \ { | c"flo"'c NERVO“S < rods till them sojers went by. They has | apreast, vielng with each other to reach the 3 R gentleman was so well pleased with the fine Sweet breath, sweet stomach, sweet tem- [] man would be sacrificed. “The major,” he er? Then use DeWitt's Little B i Riswonted 1o s comknion In't moing to | MY to see them to know that T had gol | summit as If with the one thought only. Al- 3 appearance of the country and the future [ PCT? Thon use DeWitt's Little Barly Risers. AND K 1pé 18, At going 1o | away, They'll hang around the cross roads | ready the sting and smart of acrid fumes prospects of the settlement that he took a ot risk a white man's skin when he till they see my signal on top of the ridge, | were in their eyes and nostrils, When they A FACTS WITHOUL FRILLS. an Injin's nide hands id then they'll make another show again | at last stood on level ground again It was HomSRac . promised .ty Teturnzandibe - v‘ E DI E The reluctant Ing step of the half | that pass. Your men will have their hands | hidden by a thin film of grayish-blue haze 15 road ¥ he had already come to the come their spiritual shepherd Btk 18 made from.s breed as they walked along seemed to give | full, I reckon, without huntin' for you, of | that seemed to be creeping along it. But In May, 1873, Rev. Sweders returned and Pekin has 15,000 police. some color to this hypothesis, He listened | notjeln' the three men o' mine that Will | above was the clear sky. seen through the settled on his homestead and toward the R T 1 sullenly to the major as he pointed out the | ¢ along this ridge where the sojers | interlacing boughs, and to their surprise, they ¥ ey i (e AL R THED IR ¢ ! strateg] on of the bar That wagon | come yesterday—to help me get you down in [ who had just come from the breathles: ! latter, part of that summer a formal church Electric tanning is Increasin Dr, Searles and Searles, '1* 3 ‘.«‘.w' ge road the only approach to Wynyards, and | the same way. You see, 1 r, your little | stagnant hillside, a flerce wind was blowing! y i organization was effected Rev., Sweders SRR A dozon men along the rocks could hold it | trap in that gully ain’t in this Aight! we're | But the roaring was louler than before (Pt however, preseribed g wainst a hundred, The trail that you came | the other side of It. I ain't much of 8 Unless your three men are already here S Ho¥E ohv o100 v i over the ridge, drops straight fnto this | soldier, but I reckon I've got you there; and | your game is up,” said the major calmly bl AR 2 7 guily, and you saw what that would mean to it's all owlng to you, I ain't’’ he added | “The wind biows dead along the ridge where legibility. for membership, so that only five Connecticut has 30,000 farms MAGN ETIC NERVINE any blanked fools who might try it. Of | gloomily, “takin’ much pride Init mys | they should come, and they can't get through R T \¢ could come up to the high standard, and [ Aerica has 20,000 newspapors . course, we could be shelled from that ridge | self,” the smoke and fir / tthese were Rev. Sweders, P. Tllley, C. Tex if the sheriff had a howitzer, or the men I shouldn’t think you would,” said the It was od true! In the scarce vm;rn Thelander, E. J. And also knew how to work one, but even then | major, “and look here!” I'll double that offe minutes that had elapsed e the sheriff's The b & ¥ ervousProstra- we could oceupy the ridge before them.” | I made you just now. Set me down just as | retura the dry and brittle underbrush for e following Sunday the membership was Frisco is the leading whaling port HomoEnereniL He paused a moment and then added: “I | I am on the deck of some coasting vessel | half a mile on ecither side had been converte increased by J. P. Hult and wife and N. P. The states have 1,060 saving banks fose, 1l Iul“-“::f used to be In the army, Tom aw service | and I'll pay you $4,000. You may have all | into a sheet of flame, which at times rose to ) Hult. Our wool crop is 864,156,666 pounds fulize ed by ex- in Mexico before that cub you got away from | the glory of having captured me here and of | a furnace blast through the tall chimne At a meeting held July 12, 1873, the con New has 3 r / o o AL had his first trousers. I was brought up as | making your word good before your posse. | like conductors of three shafts, from whol ttution recommended by the Augustana | ) s e o gentleman—blank it all'~and here I | But you can arrang d on the v shriveled sides bark was crackling and synod was adopted and (wo weeks later (1 ; | ORE ER 4l Boftening of am! to let me give you the slip somewhere near | lighted dead limbs falling In all directions. ~ . membership was further increased by tl Qormany's navy employs 18,051 mon the Brain, causing Misary, tnaanity il Death | call Address with stamp for elroulars K, recelpts and symptom blanks Cal R LA drway south of post office. Room 100 national ban ¢ 1, Nebraska, very severe require ments or spiritual attainments necessary to 8 is fir cattle and cotton E d with written reon and his wite. | Liverpool has an electrle clevated Quaranteo to cuire York city A ton of diamonds fs worth $35,000,0 The man slouched on by his side, casting | Sacramento The whole valley, the gully, the bar, the following additions ars Larson, 0. ¢ Submarine cables stroteh 140,400 miles Tirronose, fnpo Cou' Fower in olthr vex his surly, furtive glances from left to right The sheriff’s face actually brightened very hiliside they had just left, was blotted \ S 3 t Swanson and Olof Berglin, and shortly afte Florida raises fifty varieties of AL G R GRS SR a8 if secking to escape from these confl- hanks for that, Major, I was gettin’ a [ out by a creeping, stifling smoke-fc Sraiby. Ol TRl sran A TaVaTR 64 Boh T -1 8060 B0 s AR R L LA LR UL de Nevertheless the major kept on | little sick of my share in this job, but | scarcely rose breast high, but was During the month of October, 1873, the Uncle Sam loads the world in the wheat | Noural Vigor and”doublos tho joya of Tife; cures th h the gully, until reaching the wagon ! you've put some sand in me, Well, | down or cut off cleanly by the violent wind membership was increased by about twenty Epe s e St OO L C LB 2 W EER ‘ll.'_mr:nm‘um1y:~,;::. o Woaknos, A inonths treats road they d it and began to ascend the | then, there ain't gold enough in all Cali- | that swept the higher level of the forest. 1 o additions, but have failed to secure their | CUtPUt sttt il S AU L opposite slope, half hidden by the und to make me let you go! You hear me; so | At times this gale became a sirocco in tem- s names. Blankets were named after the Inventor. Fitten Quaranteo (v i or round the monoy. brush and larches, Here the paused | drop that. I've took you and took ve'll | perature, concentrating its heat in withering At a moeting held January 2, 1874, Rev Arizona ranks Afth in silver production. CIreulirs free, Guarantoo fssued only by our ex- again and faced about. The eabins remain until T land you in Sacramento Jail. [ blasts which they could not face or focusing Sweders presiding and N. P. Hult secrotary rmany las 5,000,000 savings banks do- | CjlSe seent settloment were already behind the I don't want to kil 'you, though your life's | its intensity upon some mass of folia the following officers were elected: Dea- | positors, S the little stream which indicated the forfeit a dozen times over, and I reckon y seemed to shrink at its touch and op P el L LML e on which some perfunctory mining was still | don't care for it cither way, but it you try athed and quivering aisle to its appre and B. J. Anderson; trustees, August Hult contintied, now and then rung out quite ! any tricks on me I may have to maim ye | The cnormous skeleton of a dead and rotten 0. G. Swanson and N. P. Hult, A committes clearlyat their feet, although the bar itselt | to make you come along com'fable and casy. | redwood, not 100 yards to their right, broke consisting of C. Johnson, Olof Berglin. P. had di ared. The sounds of occupation | T ain’t hankerin’ arter that, either, but come | suddenly like a gigantic firework into sparks [ e Peterson, E.Lindblad and C. Thelander were ) R m TQ and you will and labor had at last died out in the dis | you shail.” of flame, THERE, HE SAID .\ SAVIGLY, GO ON [ Zoleton ishobiad and O Thelatder wore o ) l K L \ e tance. They were quite alone. The major | = “Giv' your signal and have an end of this,” | The sherift had grasped the full meaning WERE EQUAL, SHOTGHEL IR SORLILCOS: torapur e T br & o, o A never go else- sat down on a boulder and pointed to | said the major curtiy. of their situation. ~In spite of his first crror = = 2 S > v AN Whiehe St anothier. The man, however, remained suls‘{ The sheriff looked at him again curiously. | —the very carelessness of familiar ~ —his | sherilf shook him roughly, so roughly th el above mealing tho reslanation ol (AW 77 & : 7 Q h y e hoto : o5 back- lenly standing where he was, as If (0 accent | “I never had my hands in another man's | knowledgo of wooderaft was greatc (han | the majore waistcoat aid shirt dagee Sivoders: wen s emianiitor dunsnaia | Benson‘s (&) S R L CE R T ns strongly possible the enforced coms | pocket before, major, but T reckon I'll have | his companion’s, and he saw thei e open and disclosed his fine silk undershirt Bl grounds, accessorics and lenses. shortly thereafter re a call from ) Our stylish inphotos are always 0., i oh OMATIA panionship. Either the major | to take your derringers from y " “Ha “Come,"” he said quickly, “We must make | delicately worked and embroide with | Boone, Ia., he moved from that settlement a | slipped his hands into the major's walstcoat | for an opening or we shall be caught.” Kolden thread. At the sight of this abased [ At tho meeting held February 2. 1874, the Po sPl ste 5 Ata i ol S he major smiled in misapprehension. and faded magnificence the sherif’s hand | committee on chareh sito recommended (he rou a r Untiochits S = =R - 2 Who couldcateh us here?e was (atayed; hiajeyer wandersil ove \he | corner near Peter Anderson’s farm. The IS THE BEST. e sheriff pointed to the blazing tree. | sleeping i) es, the hair | roport of the committee was not approved » 5 “That,"he said. “In five minutes it will | was dyed, too the roots It' was quite | and the heautiful location upon which the 1,}'“&'5“"".’7":";“"‘ 0 have a pos that will wipe us ou white and grizzled; the pomatum was com- church was flnaily builded was selected. The K2 REsq KEST, 0 He caught the major by the arm and | ing off the pointed moustache and imperial ttlement, during the pastoral vacancy, re- g Ry S ot rushed him into the smoke, and apparently | the face in that light was very haggard: | ceived visits from. e G. Larson of Wards over s\ il o in the direction of the greatest mass of | the lines from the angle of the nostril and Saunders cou (-«5 »\\\\‘ Z= flame. The heat was suffocating, but it | mouth were like deep, half-healed gashes. At the meeting held January 2, 1875, C. ‘/ur_\\-’v_'_‘lvsflnv_l?n”\i. U777 struck the mafor that the more they ap- | The maujor was, without doubt, prema- | penrson presiding and N. B Hlt sorine, 1 e eat wnd Simoke bociaie lesr mch he | e wheri essntent eves, however, | dAlerson, wud Join Nelson were elested = HIGH CLASS PHOTOGRAPHY. 4 deacons, and P. J. Anderson and €. Fred saw that the fire was retreating before them | seemed to effect what-his ruder hand could | riekson trustecs, = Ttev. L. b, and the following wind. In a few moments | not” The sleeping man stirred, awoke to | called fo the pastorship, whic ‘Aecepte 313-315 317 So. 15ta St., Omaha their haven of safety—the expanse already | full consciousness, and sat up. During the summer of the church hurned over me in o sight Here and ‘Are they here? I'm ready, he said | was builded, size 24x32 feet. The parsonage \ Tak> E evator. there seen dimly through the drifting smoke | calmly. was also built the r. In 1582 the the scattered cmbers that still wed the “No,” said the sheriff, deliberately. “I [ prosent commodious and elegant chureh was I e forest floor glowed in weird nebulous spots | only woke ye to say that I've been thinkin' | erected: eost inelud bnage, $10,000. > will o' -hu' wisps. For an instant the | over what you asked of me, and if we get Present membership 650, s major hesitated; tl riff cast a s to mento all right, why I'll do it and 5 o q v CIZAT: g cant glance behind them give ve that day and nlght at your owa | RELIGIOUS = ORGANIZATIONS — AND Go on; it’s our only chance,” he 1im- | lodgings.” CHURCHE: peratively, “Thank you.' The first Baptist church was organized in 1 They darted on, skimming the blackened or he major reached ont his hand; the | the fall of 1873 at the home of Mathew Sam- X S | LY smouldering surface which at times siruck | sheriff hesitated, and then extended his own, | uelson, two miles west of Stromsburg, with | i AV out spark and flame from their hoavier fa The hands of the two men clasped for the | €leven members, viz.:Mathew Samuelson and 0 J J [ l prints as they p 2, eir boots crackled | first, and, it would secm, the last time wife, George Mattson and wife, A. Norin 2 and scorched beneath hem; their shr B il ey OV g s g oot and ‘wite, L. Blom and wife, Jonas Buckley clothing were on fire; their breathing be For the “cub of West Point” was, like [ and wife, and Mr. Burgeson. The first pas- B " sPEG'ALlsT more difficult, until, providentially, they fell | most cubs, irritable when thwarted. And | tor was Rev. Lundgren, who 1 en fol- AR upon an abrupt, fissure-like depr having been baiked of Tig prey, the deserter, | lowed by Revs. A. F. Palm, A. P. Bkman, y Preaidont of the soil, which the fire had leaped, and possibly chaffed by his comrades for his [ L. Arlanden, M rson. which they blindiy plunged and Drofitiess invasion. of " Wynyard's Bar, ho he church edifice was built in 1886, Is of DICAL ND folinwad s they orapt alon;the Rasure Miod | Ly Toraiuded Iie commanding: offcer (o | brick, ot b5 mensns, prc' ¢ 950 | THE COMPLEXION AND BEAUTY. { “urion Kreer ve him permission a recapture. . damp and rotting leaves. it came about that at dawn, filing [ The Swedlsh Evangelical Lutheran Mis- In unsgrol Why not stay here?” said the exhausted | along the ridge, on the outskirts of the | sion Covenant church is one among the old- MRy Glitonto. Privatolwud Bl sonaL. fire, his heart gladdened by the sight | est church organizations in the county. At 5 NerviupinibnnossiWrIte And be roasted like sweet potatogs when | of (he half breed, with his hanging ham- | the time the location of the Swede Home MME M S{A] E S o groansiit pemonally, UL A teh,” returned the sherif | jygek belt and tattered army tunic, evi- | church was decided upon, the m v, . . ) A N grimly. “No.” Bven as he spoke a dropping | dently still a fugitive, not 100 yards away as displeased with the location c oniR i f i dently still a fugitive, no vards away | Wi ed wit 1 cm omedios | teulars which willb: st b plaln eavalop rain of fire spattered through the leaves | on (he other side Bf the belt of fire, running | organization in 1574, and a lot was presented | EXcelsior Gemploxion By O Bok 04500 Mat ) L8 SULSH 8 O MARANG, from a_ splintered redwood, before over | gown (he hill with another ragged figure at | by the Stromsburg Townsite company, and | Awarded the Highest Medals and Di- looked, that was iow RlastneEnercolyiinitc side. The command to “halt” was en- | upon which the present structure was plomas from the World’s Fair Co- — e upper wind. A vague and undefinable ter 1 by a single rifle shot over the fugi- | erccted. Rev. Quist, the present pastor, has b Al By position e i, “The contugron o lons | (1Sl 27,8, il o st oee whe el | prcid, e, Qut, i presens g i Exporition. | PERRETS FERRETS seemed to obey any rule of direction. The | fight Then the boy'officer snatched a carbino | _During the winter of 1874-5 Mr. €. 0. | JMune, vale, the World-Famed complex ARE YOV TROUBLED TERROR WAS IN THE AIR. incendiary torch had passed invisibly every- | om one of his men, a volley rang out from | Norton, a prominent [farmer of Swede < Pin the treate Hor beanty has been enttivated and her youth pro : 4 s ) e thing. They scrambled out of the hollow and | {yo " Jjttle troop—the shots of the privates | Plains, Polk county, was moved to write to | served by the use of these remodics. At 41 sho WITH RATS again dashed desperately forward. mmercifully high, those of the officer and ser- | Rev. Bjurstrom, then located at Saronville, | does not ook more than 1. Charactoristio of the ait-broed'race, Hofand secured tho woapons, &Il havo to [ Boaten, Dbruised, blackened ‘and - smoke. |-Merci(iliy Wish thoss OF g SCEr Bt sers | feve BRestrCin o (8 e o' pastorai ardo vou wish o It rabbite continued confidently: trouble you for your sash, too,” he said, un- | grimed, looking less human than the ani. | SP8Gt eveied Wb Wt B8 BT AR FR (AR STh e everend gentleman responded to g wholenle: Ituo. ket aood fer- “Now, look here, Tom! I want to leave = winding the knitted silken girdle from the | mals who had long since deserted the cres 2 lm ’“ & "}, _“"n,',,l and, rolling over to- | the call, and on the 14th day of May, 1§ PRICE LIST best rabbit hunters and this cursed hole and get clear out of the | captive's waist. “You won't want it, you | they at last limped into a “wind opening* | 50 did his comp ’ 2 i : A icatroyers. - At X e still. was delivered the first Methodist sermon in Ao T AIAE TN o0 3 3 slate! Anywhoro—over the Oregon line into | aln't walking, and it'll come in handy fo | In the woods that the fire had skirted. Tho | Bether, both lay still. = = | was delivered the fret I eIk county+ this 1M British Columbia, or to the coast, where 1 | me just now majonsnniciexliaugtadlyatos tharkroundantiia] (B o e e e e e tar o ot il oncal 0t C FOR MITH PATCHES, SALLOWNESS, : T T can got & consting vessel to Mexicol It will |. He bent over, and passing it across the ma- | sherift threw himself beside him. Thelr |.JUATry roared the cheval de frisc flame, and | service was Thick, dead skin or any other diseoloration T r 3 8ls B[ S bl U[e cost money, but I've got it! It will cost a lot | Jor's breast with more gentleness and solici- [ strange relations to cach other scemed to | fallen timber, impos Heat e U R ey anpnendm L of risks, but I'll take them! I want some- | tude than he had yet shone, secured him in | be forgotten; they looked and acted as it | YOUNE officer he and lett the fire to | Rav. John Lind, prestding clder, conslsting | Yol,rel equat () purity g & 406 North 16th St, body to help we—someone to share risks i aneasy sitting posture against a tree. Then | they no longer thought of anything beyona | 6% wheeled his men. and left the of five full members, i. e., P. Stenberg and | nehid's s s p S )6 North 16th St., i mecand some ans taiatare iy Juck It | atter: carerully. trylngtthe knota and attaps’itho' present " And iwhenthe ishenitt. finglly |, SOrrect SR irvegulatity Jn his gotion, o | (of five (O membark 1 o, . Sber S0 Ailinty cas OMATIA, Irml .i.l. lnvllx(v to put me on Illu- ;wllu-rlxidll; that H.l m.«, prisoner, he turned and lightly ose and, disappearing for several minutes, | | It dil mot. "'I'“'r“l"“ e T e A e A I R RN standing/a y of the border line, by sea or land, and I'll | bounded up the il brought his hat full of water for his prisoner | COUS history. =Wor @ Wweei i on Whon Tyt ty Norton, Swen Hokanson and Ingri | Vi give you $1,000 down before we start—and | He was absent scarcely ten minutes, yot | from n distant spring that they had maeseq | Yard's Bar discovered Malor Oreratone Iylney |tomeMary Notton S nen bokanacn sud iy Ll $1,000 when T'm safe.” when he returned (i Nhalf | in their flight, he found him where he haa | Deside the o s eI 8 e inave dolasail belonged! Lol the BULLONT| DL S A Do A DX Y (oaap 0 The half-breed had changed his slouching | closed. But not “If you expect to | left him, nnchanged and unmoved the disguised sheriff B | Y TR I e v caltay | Ry thA nieal Gxkparts and wttitude, It seemed more indolent. on ac- | hold me until your posse comes you had bt He took the water gratefully, and after a [ olcod at this unfuiling evidence of thelr fost | v« SUGE sudle teINed DoashingLones k| peiotl et s oy oA count of the loosely hanging strap that had | ter take me (o some loss exposed posit pause, fixed his oyes eatlyfupontinisliglendepianuneaualed ipigest SakaL o uhadijsmantisauntll Jiliasclons 0L RO rshenanaiicluiywiinorolak fonam QUG ANy Ol once held his haversack, which was still | he said, drily. “There's a man just crossed | captor, I want you to do me a favor,” ho | 28ain Kille foughtialwholo] | iyearFan. well eRuthe R o el it y worn In a slovenly fashion over his shoulder, | the gully coming into the brush below in the [ suid slowly. “I'm not going to offer you a | Dossc, yielding only with lis life vasinever (|yearnlerd . Revi O, Swaniboina paatoriol| prisey SLnN aud e b0 ME RIS Setipl S 25 a kind of lazy sling for his shiftless hand. | wood bribe to do it either, nor ask you anything | 4oubted, and kept his memory green :n '\;a sald “circuit, S ; FRECKLES AHD L EBEO b “Well, Tom, is it a go? You can trust *None of vour tricks, major.” that isn’t in a line with your duty. I think | ran chronicles, long after Wynyard's Bar During the fall of 187 Hatiel A " ckloy 'n from youth me, for you'll have the thousand in your | “Look for yourself!" [ understand you now, if I didn’t hofore, Do | had itself become a memory. transferred (o the West HII (Platte county) | toold 1 thoni n o pocket before you start. I can tr ou, | The sherift glanced quickly below him. | you know Drigss' restaurant in Sacrass THE END. ireuiti” Rev. Olen Swanson pastor. This | iy 1 womnen L' b for I'll kill you quicker than lightning it | A man with an axe on his shoulder could be | eentor o o e “‘class’’ continued to grow slowly, but surely | or (y it you say a word of this to any one before | seen plainly making his way through the un. ‘The sheriff nodded, PRATTLE OF THE YOUNGSTERS. until in the fall of 1879 it asked ".’T .Ix e s | I go or play a single trick on me after- [ derbrush not a hundred yards aw The “Well, over the restaurant are my private e dent pastor, which was Axlv.xn ;.l.mlwl ;-‘ "\‘ THE HAIR AND EXCELSIO} HAIR TONI 3, ward,” sherlft instantly clapped fiis hands wpon his | vooms—the finest in Sacramento. Nobody | _ Minister—Tommy, what is happine conterence ot that yeatand Hav, IR 81| aray hale tnnow timed back o 1ia 0 Suddenly the two men were rolling over | captive's mouth, but at a look from his eyes | knows It but Briggs. and ho has never tow vy (promptly)—IU's when you're eatin'. | Gabrielson was assigned as the firs Tesl | wlihoutdye for v fiTst tai in e and over in the underbrush, The halt | took it away again They've been locked ever sinco I loft; I've | Auntle—It isn't good form to hold your | dent pastor. During the same yoartho & Preed had thrown himself upon the major, [ 1 sece, d grimly ou don’t want [ got the key still in my pocket ow 'when | fork In that way. Little Nicce—Auntle, do | missionary work had extended from Swode o bearing him down to the ground. The | to lure that man within r of my revolver | we get to Sacramento, instead of taking me | you think It is good form to stare at fotks | Plain to Stromsburg; it is about six miles o the haversack strap for an instant whirled like | by calling to him." gt R Ol 9F|RYo U |8 SHa08 S between the two points, plans “the loop of a 'asso in the air and descended “I e T (0 aatesl UL L HANS oY OUCLORRO G aR7 ] cwhiletthey:nre od In the fall of 1880 Rev. John Jacobson | g Moty SR Ty v 1 could have called him while you were | your prizoner for a day and a night 1 E rie—Papa, when people sel! things by to this charge, succeeded in | &1 perbottle; 6 o over the major's shoulders, pinioning his | away,” repiied the major, quistly. don't want to get uwayi you can tako what | (o mound do. they ever welgh tho scales? | Wi# asslgned to this chargo, succeeded | } i : I O pls slde. rnon the half broed, | The sheriff, with u darkened fuce, loosened | precautions you like-surround the houso | LS POUNd do they ever wolgh (1 o le 1585 by: ROV AN (RURPAGHL WA R Fles CGUIDE TO BEAUTY. Jearing opan his ragged blouse, stripped off | the sash that bound his prisoncr to the tree, | with policemen and sleep yourself in the | hops— Cortamly ot . L e Rawr| L o, cvala! willtaonal his walst belt, and s dexterously slipped | and then, lifting him in his arms, began to [ ante-room. I don't want to destroy any | ThC} eiridaithey MBI SRR S oame pastordtor ontyoar usssedediby Rov, vl oo thots o 1 I nover dear when done by i competont mi t over the ankles of the struggling man. | ascend the hill cautlously, dipping into the | papers nor evide o 20 thrc SRay, rdimmy. iR e GEArROR, ANG .. ; Doskue skMRpazto by (o) Ly Spoken & word. Only their rapld panting | ficult, the load a heavy one and the sheriff [ and after; I only want to stay there a day | lttle boy to all the shows, an' buys him In: 1886 'Rev, J, M, Olerholm ook charge [ RoURtE, Bl RENGER Bise LMY CRLIRe A graduated dentlst of experience broke the profound silence. Bach probably aglle T s 4 - i . - candy ‘thout tellin® him it'll make him sick. | o the two congregations for one year, suc- [ OR ACHIREEE B OF o e ome betntl ful teeth in his care and the will be I v y | was agile rather than imuscul After a | and a night; 1 want to be In my old rooms, | Y 2 B. Anderson, and he in v ntiously cared for. Office, 3rd floor knew that no outery would be overheard, few minutes’ climbing he was forced to pa have my imeals from the restaurant as I Visitor—Tommy, I wish to ask you a few | ceeded by Rev. J Ander i ARd young always ; Hena Block. ~ Telephone 1085, - For the first time the half breed sat | and rest his burden at the foot of a tree. | used to and sleep fn my own bed once more estions fn_grammar. Tommy—Yes, sir. | turn, atter one year, by Rev. Lundecn, = =~ | e o Beauty: 140 "Bk ut. G- s tanion e was no trace of triumph | But valley and the man in the underbrush | [ want to live for one day like a gentloman. | “It I give you the sentence,”'The ‘pupil | During the fall of 1801 Rev. H. G. Niclto At v g or satisfaction in his face, which wore the | were no longer in view as T used to live before I came here, That's es his teacher,’ what is that? “Sarcasm.” | came and remained until the fall of 1803, | SR oy S ST ST R BIRNEY’S same loweriug look of disgust as he gazed me.” sald the major quietly, “‘unstrap | all. It isn't much, Tom; yo ucan do it and | “I guess 1 know why worms Is called | when Rev. Engstrom was trausferre gepiby nalranget tion) from v oie drieetebe g D e e 5 he said, stowly | ™Y Ankles and Il walk up. We'll never | say you require to do it to get evidence | worms’ said Johnnie, is he watched s thinplavsitrom tarsenviliol o e E et hd doomnl knon bk ] cata"h Powder ant to tell you first,” he said, slowly | got there at this rate \galnst me, or that you want o se ol [T i hap Elvnye aaked!‘his Siedish Evengelical L n church & puatarrin r'ow aer wiping his face, “‘that I didn't Kalkilate [ © The sherlit paused. wiped his grimy roome. futier. - “Because Qiey hyme with | of Stromsburg was organiz i ndsse iTh A i, B Lo oy g Quterrh ond 0000 upon Joln’ this n this y e & way. L with his grimier blose and stood looking at [ The expression of wonder which had come | squiris. church was Bultin A6, oont $RE00 N expected more of a stan' up fight from you | his prisoser. Then he sald slowly {into the sherifl’s face at the beginning of | = pommy )1 You,meedn't feel so stuck Swedish business & ” m Sures —more risk in gettin’ you ot o' that hole “Look yer! WoU's your little game. | this speech deepened into his okl look of | , TOmMY—Hub! You ALtk B Al of Stromsburg are; Mme. M. YALR » DEAFNESS. :‘““‘;' '“\fx" it kind ot ‘:Il:"-”‘mll” ‘;l"\'«]'- § Blessed it 1 can follow suit.” surly dissatisfaction. *“And that's all ye [ &bt NOMT G8CUS HEREALE RS A im ay i 8. B, ;M.'\Iu‘.-l«.ml & Co., dealers Aoy (| BIREEEER SR L S g ot O lover expe ple 0 my hand For the firs o the major burst into a | want?" he said, gloomily, “Ye do L e AP "% | 1ive stock ana con i cauty anc A E . 2 \Lor sample fre like this, an agalnst me to hev to x..lu.‘r e 1Il“.I|IH'Hlilullell)\Tuxl'-” i it s ::.’ f.l\.,l'llllv I-'u‘r 5 Lot My | your daddy’s ‘been owtn® him a mitk bill ot | P4 PG B falidine of the firm of Scott, {ots, 5OC, take advanta Aoavera < h . ik R e (R e 't no hope for | ¥4 for more'n sixteen Years Yoven Peterson & Halldine, dealers in general 501 Karbach Block, B Ao Mdraniag: T :hx:(. discovered here—in this way—there's | straight out, major, there ain't no hope for Mammna (to little deughter)—Never forget Ha it & man on the bar_who would elleve | yo when iy law once gets hold of ve in | AR (0,0 SR my chila merchandise, © o ers in naraware, | 150 and Douglas Strests, Omaha, Neb, TMUMPHQFLOVE! “I'm the new sherlft o Siskivou He | by God! who wouldn't think it was o triek | That's ail. Will you do it? UL e e DI s A.FAnaeran; mest PUEKak Tl Wil Maln Offioe; 140 State By Uitleagy, 411, HE . drew from beneath his begrimed shirt a | of yours and mine. thes b The sherift's face grew still darker. After | Yes always; cveryiliw A A Farmers and Merchants bank, Joh paper wrapping, from which he ginger e fixing | @ pause he said: T don't say mo. and 1| Chiid (running in ani hour later)-Mamma, | TCEE BN (o Hedlund, cashier o A Happy, Fruitful oy 1 8 i © broke the new piteher. i 5 k ed principally extracted with the ends of his dirty fingers | his eyes on his prisone dol " es.” But e added,g thank Guod I'v The Stromsburg bank, owned y I hi n hig prisoner, “not a man who [ don't say 'y But," he addedgrim “You boys are very quict out there i | The Stromsvitk g G w clean legal-looking folded paver. “That's | would ever trust Major Overton for u Jeadie | “it strikes me we'd better wait til] e got ; ’ i 4 ¢ ARRI‘G ! my warrant! I'vo kept it fresh for you. | again.’ NEQYSFLn Lor' 8 leader these woods before you think o' | that RAERI pil1o0. 00h Billlols) pother Olot Netell, of the firm of Netscll & 1 I reckon you don't care to read it—you've | Perhaps said the majo ovedly | these Sacramento lodgings.” suspiciously ex'ny, responded . | \iard, dealers in hardware and groceries e scen it afore. IUs Just the same as Uother | again, T don't thinke elthe of hl" it fho major did not reply. The day had | OPening the back doar and T'.K”)\u:r:',’.’f; A. W. Anderson, grocerles and boots and EVERY MAN vk sherift had—what you shot ever get a chance of being trusted agaln by | Worn on, but the fire now completely en- | Out Info the alley & larke yetow shoes. woul playin’ RNOW Tho ORAND v 8 Ny e 0 his tail ] 4 handise, o r hen this was a plant of yours and that | uny one. MAID A, AL e SR T on | w i can tied t Roon Anderson, general merchan Pvom U o o) AN\ FROW o TR AN D whelp's escort?"" sald the major. The sheriff still kept his eyes fixed on his | of that fateful barrier. 1 noke of the | Sunday schoolt =, o e | Ba H. Hedstrom, of the firm of Skelton & | prof,w,If, Peoke,whomakes aepcelalty of Epilops EUI §UTHE: the Flain oNelther him nor the escort know any | prisoner, his gloomy face growing darker | burning underbrush hung low around them | The d-year-old boy h Hedstrom, general merchandise has without doubit treated and cured more cases than and the New Di ) cgress for o scoverics of Medical Belence more about it than you,” returned the sherif | under its grime That ain't the reason, | In a hank eaually impenetrable to vision. [ €48t side, K“““l“l’A‘k”»‘“'“':“fi.k::\"'(“"(',_ forad | Mr. Stenstrom, general merchandise. anyliving Physician ; his success s astonishing. Wo Wwsapplicd to Married Life, should write for slowly. I enllsted a8 Injin guide or scout | major. Life and death mean mucl s | They were as alone as shipwrecked saflors | Burse. She is blac d an z ! b de can much more | They were s s atlors Andrew Nuquist, general merchandise. ha rdof cases of 20 years' standing cured by him. our wonderful iile book, called ) )l 8 hie as to dispositio) and 3 t FECT NHOOD." To any earnest ten days ago. 1 desorted just as reglar | to o oy da/to s d o sland, girdled by & horizon of clouds, | features, but seraphic as to disposition, an e % Haltquist, farm implements. Tle publishes valushlework on thia difease which o FECT MAD } sojers if they caught sight o' me, and court | I'm takin® you to the gallows, g And if your men come?” said the sherifr, | persuade him to Kiss her and e chap [ o). Johson, with Scott & Johnson, farm | dréss. We advise anyone wishing a cure to address, martinled—it's as reg'lar as that! But 1| “Pho reason is that I want to leave Wyn. | OF ’ would never give a reason for withholding | 0; 3. ) Prof. W. 1L YEEKE, ¥. D., 4 Cedar t,, New York ERIE MEDICAL GO., Buffalo, N.Y. timed to have my posse, under a deputy, | yard's Bar,”" sald the major coolly. “And | “Shoot me.” the osculation. Finally, anlo day last week Peter Hanson, manager of Chicago Lumber ’ draw you off by an attack, fust as tho eacort | aven this way out of it will suit me.” He laid down, closed his eves, and, to | he succumbad to the plecttss 68 (e MO | oompany 3 3 o — reached the ridge. And here 1 am.” The sheriff took his revolver from his | the sherift’s astonishment, prescntly fell | and yle LAY e ots e AR 1. A. Erickson, jeweler and musical instru “And you're no half-breed pocket and del:berately cocksd It, Then lean. | asleep. The sherlff, with Lis ohin in his | Biven he ran to iy mother orviug: 0L |l 4 ASK FOR A s nothin' Injin about mo that water | ing down he unbuckled the strap from the | &rimy hands, \d watched him as the | Kithed Betty, and her dc AR J. A. Anderson, jeweler and watch re wash off. I Kalkilated you wouldn't [ major's ankles. A wild hope that his in. | day slowly darkened around them, and the Bobby what hes greaffes got such | pairing 3 pect anything so insignificant as an Injin | comprehensible captive might steze that mo- | distant fires came out in more lurid in & necks fc Stromsburg Brick cowpany, Berglund, Nel when I fixed myself up. You see Dawson | ment to develop his real Intent: that he | tensity. The face of the captive and out ond Perent—God gave them their 1ong | gon & Rodin didn't hanker after me much, But I didn't ight fly, fight or in some way act up to his | lawed murderer was singularly peaceful; | necks so that they could reach the leaves of Isauc Boostrom, brick manufacturer, reckon on your tumbling to me s0quick. | reckless reputation, sustained him for a mo that of the captor and man of duty was | the palm, which only grow at the top of Alfred Anderson, harness maker hat's what gets me! You must hev' been | ment, but in the next proved futile. The | haggard, wild and perplexed. the tree. That is the only way they N Mr. Anderson, photographer pretty low down for kempany when you took | major only sald. *Thank don't see it yet."” jet up and go on,” said the sherif, s face an to work, his lips to move. | made the leaves grow lower down sarlson & Netsell, wagon mak.ng and gen S =5 . 3 3 & i He looked inquiringly at his captive with | roughly » 2N MTom ik L sasned suadanly Uear: F A Oapkaan & For sule by ull First Class Deulers. Manufactured by the "";\"‘“ :“"‘“’L‘“N :‘"'H“-';‘* hN"' "““j' he he major began to slowly ascend the hilf The sheriff bent over him eagerly. The Curo indigestion and billousness with Westinus, r and proprietor of F. R, RICE MERCANTILE CIGAR CO,, understand another thing which was evident, lose cel o § | sleeping man's eyes were closed; beads | DeWitt's Little Early Risers, e . 804 8 | ¥ the aberiff close on his heels, alert, tingling | sleeping man's eyes were still closed; beads | Dewitt's Little Early Risers the News, Faotory No. 804, 6t Louls, Mo lings of the nursc